Christine Ep. 8 of 12 Feat. America Ferrera WIGS

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0:37 Hi. I’m Billy Oswald. Friends call me Oz. Christine. 0:44 It’s hard to keep up the, uh, you know, it’s hard keeping it up. Oh boy. 0:53 Good start. Yeah. So what do you do for work? 0:57 I’m a playwright. I write plays. 1:01 Oh wow, so you’re an artist. Are you — are any of your plays, uh… 1:10 Am I famous? Yeah. 1:13 No, no yet. So, would I have seen any of your plays? 1:19 Um, one of them premiered at South Coast Rep. In Orange County. 1:23 It’s a pretty highly regarded theater company. The name of the play is “Rose and Violet Regain Their Virginity.” 1:30 How do they do that? 1:32 They don’t, ‘cause they’re not in the play. What do you mean? 1:38 Rose and Violet are two girls that went to school with Cynthia, and Cynthia’s kind of the lead character in the play. 1:45 Cynthia used to be in awe of them, back in high school, she still kind of regards them as these powerful girls that could get away with anything. 1:53 Cynthia’s made some mistakes in her life and ultimately the play is kind of about her coming to terms with those mistakes and how it shakes up her marriage. 2:02 So it’s not a funny play. 2:04 It’s got a little bit of everything, just like life. There are some laughs in it. 2:08 Well what is it based on? Something real? Like a real person? 2:11 No. What about you what do you do? 2:15 So you just wrote it? About a woman. I — yeah. 2:19 Wow, you’ve got balls. Technically I have testicles, yes. 2:23 But that has nothing to do with it, men write about women all the time and women write about men. It’s called imagination. 2:28 You know every time I watch a movie about a woman — -that’s made by a man… 2:33 She’s either a foolish romantic who’s sitting around, waiting for some Prince Charming to come in and rescue her… 2:41 Or she’s some damaged, hysterical person. So your woman, what’s her name? 2:46 Cynthia. Is she foolish or is she hysterical? 2:50 Neither one of those things, no, she’s complicated. You know, like most women. 2:55 But I guess she is a little damaged, you could say, but no more than anybody else. And men are pretty damaged too, don’t you think? 3:03 But male or female, it doesn’t really matter, those are the most interesting characters to write, you know? The ones with serious problems. 3:11 Bet there’s a lot of sex in your play, right? 3:15 There’s none on stage, anyway. She is complicated sexually, though. 3:19 Oh, of course, very complicated. Mad, hysterical, complicated, dramatic woman sex, right? 3:28 I don’t think I’ve ever pissed anybody off so quickly in my life. 3:30 I’m sure you have, I’m sure they just haven’t let you know it. 3:36 And I’m not pissed, I don’t know you, there’s nothing to be pissed about. 3:43 What is going on? 3:47 I’m sorry, what do you mean, Mr. Expert on women? 4:00 I’m a grad student in dentistry. For fun I like to rock climb and read Latin American literature. 4:09 Um, I love listening to crooners. Oh, my grandmother had an affair with Frank Sinatra, once. 4:15 My parents are cops. Dad’s Jewish, a beat cop, and Mom is Catholic, Latina, detective — detective III, that’s a rank. Say something. 4:29 So you can use it against me? 4:31 Look, it’s just all this starting over, every five minutes makes me feel like I don’t even know who I am anymore. So, please just say something. 4:43 Like what?